Spiral galaxy explained

Spiral galaxies form a class of galaxy originally described by Edwin Hubble in his 1936 work The Realm of the Nebulae[1] and, as such, form part of the Hubble sequence. Most spiral galaxies consist of a flat, rotating disk containing stars, gas and dust, and a central concentration of stars known as the bulge. These are often surrounded by a much fainter halo of stars, many of which reside in globular clusters.

Spiral galaxies are named by their spiral structures that extend from the center into the galactic disc. The spiral arms are sites of ongoing star formation and are brighter than the surrounding disc because of the young, hot OB stars that inhabit them.

Roughly two-thirds of all spirals are observed to have an additional component in the form of a bar-like structure,[2] extending from the central bulge, at the ends of which the spiral arms begin. The proportion of barred spirals relative to barless spirals has likely changed over the history of the universe, with only about 10% containing bars about 8 billion years ago, to roughly a quarter 2.5 billion years ago, until present, where over two-thirds of the galaxies in the visible universe (Hubble volume) have bars.[3]

The Milky Way is a barred spiral, although the bar itself is difficult to observe from Earth's current position within the galactic disc.[4] The most convincing evidence for the stars forming a bar in the Galactic Center comes from several recent surveys, including the Spitzer Space Telescope.[5]

Together with irregular galaxies, spiral galaxies make up approximately 60% of galaxies in today's universe.[6] They are mostly found in low-density regions and are rare in the centers of galaxy clusters.[7]

Structure

Spiral galaxies may consist of several distinct components:

The relative importance, in terms of mass, brightness and size, of the different components varies from galaxy to galaxy.

Spiral arms

See main article: article and Spiral arm.

Spiral arms are regions of stars that extend from the center of barred and unbarred spiral galaxies. These long, thin regions resemble a spiral and thus give spiral galaxies their name. Naturally, different classifications of spiral galaxies have distinct arm-structures. Sc and SBc galaxies, for instance, have very "loose" arms, whereas Sa and SBa galaxies have tightly wrapped arms (with reference to the Hubble sequence). Either way, spiral arms contain many young, blue stars (due to the high mass density and the high rate of star formation), which make the arms so bright.

Bulge

See main article: article and Galactic bulge. A bulge is a large, tightly packed group of stars. The term refers to the central group of stars found in most spiral galaxies, often defined as the excess of stellar light above the inward extrapolation of the outer (exponential) disk light.

Using the Hubble classification, the bulge of Sa galaxies is usually composed of Population II stars, which are old, red stars with low metal content. Further, the bulge of Sa and SBa galaxies tends to be large. In contrast, the bulges of Sc and SBc galaxies are much smaller[9] and are composed of young, blue Population I stars. Some bulges have similar properties to those of elliptical galaxies (scaled down to lower mass and luminosity); others simply appear as higher density centers of disks, with properties similar to disk galaxies.

Many bulges are thought to host a supermassive black hole at their centers. In our own galaxy, for instance, the object called Sagittarius A* is a supermassive black hole. There are many lines of evidence for the existence of black holes in spiral galaxy centers, including the presence of active nuclei in some spiral galaxies, and dynamical measurements that find large compact central masses in galaxies such as Messier 106.

Bar

Bar-shaped elongations of stars are observed in roughly two-thirds of all spiral galaxies.[10] [11] Their presence may be either strong or weak. In edge-on spiral (and lenticular) galaxies, the presence of the bar can sometimes be discerned by the out-of-plane X-shaped or (peanut shell)-shaped structures[12] [13] which typically have a maximum visibility at half the length of the in-plane bar.

Spheroid

The bulk of the stars in a spiral galaxy are located either close to a single plane (the galactic plane) in more or less conventional circular orbits around the center of the galaxy (the Galactic Center), or in a spheroidal galactic bulge around the galactic core.

However, some stars inhabit a spheroidal halo or galactic spheroid, a type of galactic halo. The orbital behaviour of these stars is disputed, but they may exhibit retrograde and/or highly inclined orbits, or not move in regular orbits at all. Halo stars may be acquired from small galaxies which fall into and merge with the spiral galaxy—for example, the Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy is in the process of merging with the Milky Way and observations show that some stars in the halo of the Milky Way have been acquired from it.

Unlike the galactic disc, the halo seems to be free of dust, and in further contrast, stars in the galactic halo are of Population II, much older and with much lower metallicity than their Population I cousins in the galactic disc (but similar to those in the galactic bulge). The galactic halo also contains many globular clusters.

The motion of halo stars does bring them through the disc on occasion, and a number of small red dwarfs close to the Sun are thought to belong to the galactic halo, for example Kapteyn's Star and Groombridge 1830. Due to their irregular movement around the center of the galaxy, these stars often display unusually high proper motion.

Oldest spiral galaxies

BRI 1335-0417 is the oldest and most distant known spiral galaxy, as of 2024.The galaxy has a redshift of 4.4, meaning its light took 12.4 billion years to reach Earth.[14]

The oldest grand design spiral galaxy on file is BX442. At eleven billion years old, it is more than two billion years older than any previous discovery. Researchers believe the galaxy's shape is caused by the gravitational influence of a companion dwarf galaxy. Computer models based on that assumption indicate that BX442's spiral structure will last about 100 million years.[15] [16]

A1689B11 is an extremely old spiral galaxy located in the Abell 1689 galaxy cluster in the Virgo constellation.[17] A1689B11 is 11 billion light years from the Earth, forming 2.6 billion years after the Big Bang.[18] [19]

Related

In June 2019, citizen scientists through Galaxy Zoo reported that the usual Hubble classification, particularly concerning spiral galaxies, may not be supported, and may need updating.[20] [21]

Origin of the spiral structure

History

The pioneer of studies of the rotation of the Galaxy and the formation of the spiral arms was Bertil Lindblad in 1925. He realized that the idea of stars arranged permanently in a spiral shape was untenable. Since the angular speed of rotation of the galactic disk varies with distance from the centre of the galaxy (via a standard solar system type of gravitational model), a radial arm (like a spoke) would quickly become curved as the galaxy rotates. The arm would, after a few galactic rotations, become increasingly curved and wind around the galaxy ever tighter. This is called the winding problem. Measurements in the late 1960s showed that the orbital velocity of stars in spiral galaxies with respect to their distance from the galactic center is indeed higher than expected from Newtonian dynamics but still cannot explain the stability of the spiral structure.

Since the 1970s, there have been two leading hypotheses or models for the spiral structures of galaxies:

These different hypotheses are not mutually exclusive, as they may explain different types of spiral arms.

Density wave model

See main article: Density wave theory. Bertil Lindblad proposed that the arms represent regions of enhanced density (density waves) that rotate more slowly than the galaxy's stars and gas. As gas enters a density wave, it gets squeezed and makes new stars, some of which are short-lived blue stars that light the arms.[22]

Historical theory of Lin and Shu

The first acceptable theory for the spiral structure was devised by C. C. Lin and Frank Shu in 1964,[23] attempting to explain the large-scale structure of spirals in terms of a small-amplitude wave propagating with fixed angular velocity, that revolves around the galaxy at a speed different from that of the galaxy's gas and stars. They suggested that the spiral arms were manifestations of spiral density waves – they assumed that the stars travel in slightly elliptical orbits, and that the orientations of their orbits is correlated i.e. the ellipses vary in their orientation (one to another) in a smooth way with increasing distance from the galactic center. This is illustrated in the diagram to the right. It is clear that the elliptical orbits come close together in certain areas to give the effect of arms. Stars therefore do not remain forever in the position that we now see them in, but pass through the arms as they travel in their orbits.[24]

Star formation caused by density waves

The following hypotheses exist for star formation caused by density waves:

More young stars in spiral arms

Spiral arms appear visually brighter because they contain both young stars and more massive and luminous stars than the rest of the galaxy. As massive stars evolve far more quickly,[25] their demise tends to leave a darker background of fainter stars immediately behind the density waves. This make the density waves much more prominent.[22]

Spiral arms simply appear to pass through the older established stars as they travel in their galactic orbits, so they also do not necessarily follow the arms.[22] As stars move through an arm, the space velocity of each stellar system is modified by the gravitational force of the local higher density. Also the newly created stars do not remain forever fixed in the position within the spiral arms, where the average space velocity returns to normal after the stars depart on the other side of the arm.[24]

Gravitationally aligned orbits

Charles Francis and Erik Anderson showed from observations of motions of over 20,000 local stars (within 300 parsecs) that stars do move along spiral arms, and described how mutual gravity between stars causes orbits to align on logarithmic spirals. When the theory is applied to gas, collisions between gas clouds generate the molecular clouds in which new stars form, and evolution towards grand-design bisymmetric spirals is explained.[26]

Distribution of stars in spirals

The stars in spirals are distributed in thin disks radial with intensity profiles such that[27] [28] [29]

I(R)=I0e-R/h

with

h

being the disk scale-length;

I0

is the central value; it is useful to define:

Ropt=3.2h

as the size of the stellar disk, whose luminosity is

Ltot=2\piI0h2

.

The spiral galaxies light profiles, in terms of the coordinate

R/h

, do not depend on galaxy luminosity.

Spiral nebula

Before it was understood that spiral galaxies existed outside of our Milky Way galaxy, they were often referred to as spiral nebulae, due to Lord Rosse, whose telescope Leviathan was the first to reveal the spiral structure of galaxies. In 1845 he discovered the spiral structure of M51, a galaxy nicknamed later as the "Whirlpool Galaxy", and his drawings of it closely resemble modern photographs. In 1846 and in 1849 Lord Rosse identified similar pattern in Messier 99 and Messier 33 respectively. In 1850 he made the first drawing of Andromeda Galaxy's spiral structure. In 1852 Stephen Alexander supposed that Milky Way is also a spiral nebula.[30]

The question of whether such objects were separate galaxies independent of the Milky Way, or a type of nebula existing within our own galaxy, was the subject of the Great Debate of 1920, between Heber Curtis of Lick Observatory and Harlow Shapley of Mount Wilson Observatory. Beginning in 1923, Edwin Hubble[31] [32] observed Cepheid variables in several spiral nebulae, including the so-called "Andromeda Nebula", proving that they are, in fact, entire galaxies outside our own. The term spiral nebula has since fallen out of use.

Milky Way

The Milky Way was once considered an ordinary spiral galaxy. Astronomers first began to suspect that the Milky Way is a barred spiral galaxy in the 1960s.[33] [34] Their suspicions were confirmed by Spitzer Space Telescope observations in 2005,[35] which showed that the Milky Way's central bar is larger than what was previously suspected.

See also

Other

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Hubble, E.P.. The realm of the nebulae. Yale University Press. 1936. 9780300025002. Mrs. Hepsa Ely Silliman memorial lectures, 25. New Haven. 611263346. Edwin Hubble. Alt URL(pp. 124–151)
  2. Book: D. Mihalas . 1968 . Galactic Astronomy . W. H. Freeman . 978-0-7167-0326-6.
  3. Web site: Hubble and Galaxy Zoo Find Bars and Baby Galaxies Don't Mix . 16 January 2014 . .
  4. Ripples in a Galactic Pond. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20130906193501/http://www.sciamdigital.com/index.cfm?fa=Products.ViewIssuePreview&ARTICLEID_CHAR=3BC08F0C-2B35-221B-67A9F2AE04AFC79A. Scientific American. October 2005. 6 September 2013.
  5. September 2005. First GLIMPSE Results on the Stellar Structure of the Galaxy. The Astrophysical Journal Letters. 630. 2. L149–L152. astro-ph/0508325. 2005ApJ...630L.149B. 10.1086/491785. R. A. Benjamin. E. Churchwell. B. L. Babler. R. Indebetouw. M. R. Meade. B. A. Whitney. C. Watson. M. G. Wolfire. M. J. Wolff. R. Ignace. T. M. Bania. S. Bracker. D. P. Clemens. L. Chomiuk. M. Cohen. J. M. Dickey. J. M. Jackson. H. A. Kobulnicky. E. P. Mercer. J. S. Mathis. S. R. Stolovy. B. Uzpen. 14782284.
  6. February 1996. The APM Bright Galaxy Catalogue. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 278. 4. 1025–1048. astro-ph/9603040. 1996MNRAS.278.1025L. 10.1093/mnras/278.4.1025. Loveday, J.. free .
  7. March 1980. Galaxy morphology in rich clusters — Implications for the formation and evolution of galaxies. The Astrophysical Journal. 236. 351–365. 1980ApJ...236..351D. 10.1086/157753. Dressler, A.. free.
  8. Salucci . P. . The distribution of dark matter in galaxies . . 2019 . 27 . 1 . 2 . 10.1007/s00159-018-0113-1 . 1811.08843 . 2019A&ARv..27....2S.
  9. Alister W. Graham and C. Clare Worley (2008), Inclination- and dust-corrected galaxy parameters: bulge-to-disc ratios and size-luminosity relations
  10. de Vaucouleurs, G.; de Vaucouleurs, A.; Corwin, H. G., Jr.; Buta, R. J.; Paturel, G.; Fouqué, P. (2016), Third Reference Catalogue of Bright Galaxies
  11. B.D. Simmons et al. (2014), Galaxy Zoo: CANDELS barred discs and bar fractions
  12. Astronomy Now (8 May 2016), Astronomers detect double ‘peanut shell’ galaxies
  13. Bogdan C. Ciambur and Alister W. Graham (2016), Quantifying the (X/peanut)-shaped structure in edge-on disc galaxies: length, strength, and nested peanuts
  14. Web site: May 20, 2021 . ALMA Spots Candidate for Most Distant Known Spiral Galaxy . 20 May 2021 . www.sci-news.com.
  15. Oldest spiral galaxy is a freak of cosmos http://www.zmescience.com/space/oldest-spiral-galaxy-31321/
  16. Web site: Gonzalez. Robert T.. Hubble Has Spotted an Ancient Galaxy That Shouldn't Exist. io9. 10 September 2012. 19 July 2012.
  17. Web site: [BBC2005] Source 11 -- Galaxy]. 24 June 2018.
  18. Web site: The most ancient spiral galaxy confirmed. PhysOrg. 3 November 2017.
  19. 1710.11130. The most ancient spiral galaxy: a 2.6-Gyr-old disk with a tranquil velocity field. The Astrophysical Journal. 850. 61. Tiantian Yuan. Johan Richard. Anshu Gupta. Christoph Federrath. Soniya Sharma. Brent A. Groves. Lisa J. Kewley. Renyue Cen. Yuval Birnboim. David B. Fisher. 30 October 2017. 1 . 10.3847/1538-4357/aa951d. 2017ApJ...850...61Y. 119267114 . free .
  20. News: Royal Astronomical Society . Citizen scientists re-tune Hubble's galaxy classification . 11 June 2019 . . 11 June 2019 . Royal Astronomical Society .
  21. Masters, Karen L. . et al. . Galaxy Zoo: unwinding the winding problem – observations of spiral bulge prominence and arm pitch angles suggest local spiral galaxies are winding . 30 April 2019 . . 487 . 2 . 1808–1820 . 10.1093/mnras/stz1153 . free . 2019MNRAS.487.1808M . 1904.11436 .
  22. Book: Belkora . L.. 2003. Minding the Heavens: the Story of our Discovery of the Milky Way. CRC Press. 355. 978-0-7503-0730-7.
  23. August 1964. On the spiral structure of disk galaxies. The Astrophysical Journal. 140. 646–655. 1964ApJ...140..646L. 10.1086/147955. Lin. C. C.. Shu, F. H..
  24. .
  25. Web site: Main Sequence Lifetime. Swinburne Astronomy Online. Swinburne University of Technology. 8 June 2019.
  26. 10.1098/rspa.2009.0036. Galactic spiral structure. 2009. Francis. C.. Anderson. E.. Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences. 465. 2111. 3425–3446. 0901.3503 . 2009RSPSA.465.3425F . 12461073.
  27. F. Shirley Patterson (1940), The Luminosity Gradient of Messier 33
  28. Gerard de Vaucouleurs (1957), Studies of the Magellanic Clouds. III. Surface brightness, colors and integrated magnitudes of the Clouds.
  29. Freeman, K. C.. On the Disks of Spiral and so Galaxies. Astrophysical Journal. 160. 811. 1970. 1970ApJ...160..811F. 10.1086/150474. free.
  30. Alexander, S. On the origin of the forms and the present condition of some of the clusters of stars, and several of the nebulae. Astronomical Journal, vol. 2, iss. 37, p. 97-103 (1852)
  31. Web site: NASA - Hubble Views the Star That Changed the Universe.
  32. May 1926. A spiral nebula as a stellar system: Messier 33. The Astrophysical Journal. 63. 236–274. 1926ApJ....63..236H. 10.1086/142976. Hubble, E. P.. Edwin Hubble.
  33. Gerard de Vaucouleurs (1964), Interpretation of velocity distribution of the inner regions of the Galaxy
  34. 1996. On the spiral arm interpretation of COMPTEL 26Al map features. Space Science Reviews. 120. 315–316. 1996A&AS..120C.315C. Chen, W.. Gehrels, N.. Diehl, R.. Hartmann, D..
  35. Maggie . McKee . Bar at Milky Way's heart revealed . . 16 August 2005 . 17 June 2009.